169 A. 177 | N.J. | 1933
The action is at law to recover from the obligors on the bond the deficiency remaining due on the mortgage debt after crediting thereon the proceeds of the sale had in *597 Chancery in the foreclosure proceedings. The answer, in so far as now relevant, rests strictly and exclusively upon Pamph. L. 1933, ch. 82, amendatory of an act entitled "An act concerning proceedings on bonds and mortgages given for the same indebtedness and the foreclosure and sale of mortgaged premises thereunder," approved March 12th, 1880. 3 Comp. Stat., p. 3420,pl. 47, et seq. The amendment was passed not merely after the making of the bond in suit, but subsequent to the conclusion of the proceedings in Chancery to foreclose and subsequent also to the institution of the present action on the bond. Mr. Justice Parker, sitting below, struck the answer for the reason that the amendatory statute was unconstitutional in so far as it related to the right to enforce mortgage contracts made and delivered prior to the enactment. Defendants appeal and present the constitutional question as the single issue.
It was the right of the mortgagee, the order in Chancery confirming sale having been duly made and still subsisting, to recover the deficiency in an action upon the bond. That was his right, arising from his contract, under the 1880 statute (as amended Pamph. L. 1881, ch. 147, p. 184), supra, which provided that a creditor holding a bond and mortgage, given for the same debt, must in proceeding to collect first foreclose the mortgage but that if, at the foreclosure sale, the premises should not sell for a sum sufficient to satisfy the debt, interest and costs, it would then be lawful to proceed on the bond for the deficiency. The deficiency was the amount by which the debt, as adjudged by the Court of Chancery in the foreclosure decree, exceeded the proceeds from the sale conducted by that court. Murray v. Pearce,
We are considering the statute. It is unimportant that the foreclosure sale in the case at bar was to the mortgagee himself. The statute applies, without distinction, whether the sale be to the mortgagee or to a third party, and the statute is incapable of dissection so that it may be held to apply in the one instance and not in the other. There is no legal obligation upon a mortgagee either to bid up, or to bid in, the property at the foreclosure sale, and the impairment of his contract is the more obvious when the property is struck off to a third person at a figure less than that subsequently fixed in the action on the bond as the "fair market value." In such a posture the mortgagee has no further recourse to the property itself; the property is gone with no right of redemption in him. He is compelled to forfeit a part of the debt which his contract, valid and enforceable when made, gave him; at least his remedy for enforcing the contract has been taken away. On the first assumption, his contract is impaired. On the second, he is deprived of a remedy. The law that accomplishes *599
the former of these results is in conflict with both the federal and the state constitutions, and one that accomplishes the latter is in conflict with the state constitution. In truth, the taking away of the remedy in the supposed instance is inseparably combined with and equivalent to the taking away of the right itself. Our attention is called by the appellants to Rahway v.Munday,
The statutory setting up of fair market value, standing stark and alone, as a self-sufficient, resistless fact in reduction of an otherwise collectible debt is such a restriction and limitation upon the mortgagee's right of recovery as to be an impairment of a pre-existing contract and therefore, and to that extent, in conflict with article 1, section 10, subdivision 1 of the constitution of the United States which provides that "no state shall * * * pass any * * * law impairing the obligation of contracts * * *" and with article
The appellants contend, first, that the statute does not offend the constitution because, as they claim, a remedy of substantially like sort and character already exists in equity and, second, that the statute establishes a measure of damages and is therefore merely procedural; citing Newark SavingsInstitution v. Forman,
The contention that the same course in substance may be pursued in Chancery is not sound. In asserting the contrary the appellants rely mainly upon the principles enunciated in the recent Chancery case Federal Title and Mortgage Guaranty Co. v.Lowenstein,
There are at least two respects in which the remedy applied in the Federal Title case, which may be referred to as a concrete illustration of the principles involved, differs in substance from the provisions of the 1933 amendment:
First, that case turned on the power of the court to control its own sale and the result was to withhold confirmation at a stage when the mortgagee was free either to take the property at the court's valuation or to suspend the proceedings and, retaining the mortgage security, bide his time. That alternative is not available, under the amendment to the creditor who has reached the stage of suing on the bond.
Second, the essence of Vice-Chancellor Berry's opinion in that case, as we understand it, is that equity will not suffer a wrong without a remedy, that a foreclosure sale is not fully a sale until confirmed by court order, that where the circumstances of the sale are such as to shock the conscience of the court no order confirming will be made and that in the matter then under review there was an inadequacy of price so gross, and there were other recited facts and circumstances *602 so inequitable, that an order confirming should not go except upon terms. We do not pass upon the facts of that case, but the reasoning, as just reviewed, is, we think, a sound exposition of equitable principles in the light of which, and subject to the application of which, the mortgage contract was made. If there be real or supposed error in any application, by Chancery, of equitable principles to a given state of facts, there is always the opportunity for a review on appeal. The question is peculiarly appropriate to equity jurisdiction. But the proposition now advanced is that the power of the Court of Chancery to view the whole field of related circumstance, to place all parts of the picture in true perspective, and to refuse an order which on this showing would work shocking injustice is correlative with the right, created for the first time by this statute, of an obligor on the bond to reduce or wipe out his debt by resort to the single and isolated fact, to be ascertained by the court in which the bond is sued, of "market value" at the time of a sale had and consummated under the order of anothercourt months before, however inequitable such reduction or destruction may be upon a view of the entire case. We find to the contrary.
As to appellants' second point, it is clear from the foregoing discussion, without more, that a right and not a mere procedure is involved. If a legislative act so changes the nature and extent of an existing remedy as to impair the rights and interest of the owner, it is just as much a violation of the compact as if it directly overturned his rights and interests. Bronson v.Kinzie, supra; McCracken v. Hayward, 2 How. 608;
It is next said that the constitutionality of the statute may be sustained under the police power; and the burden of this argument assumes that the act was passed simply to save mortgagors from oppressive suits in the present financial emergency.
As has been already stated, the appellants rely wholly and exclusively upon the statute; and the statute neither purports to be directed towards an emergency nor limits the application *603
of the enactment either in field or in time. Its purview is absolute, final and permanent. It extends to all classes of property — homes, business properties, speculative ventures, everything. According to its terms it is in force henceforth and forever. If effective now, it will be just as effective after, and entirely regardless of, the passing of the emergency. To hold that the police power enables the legislature to do that against an existing contract would be to contravene the provisions,supra, of the constitutions, both federal and state. Appellants cite Levy v. Siegel,
We may take judicial notice of the financial emergency that now presses upon so many people in so much of the world, but we may not read into the statute a limited duration that is neither expressed nor implied therein nor do we subscribe to the intimation that an emergency automatically lifts all constitutional restraints. The statute does not grant a stay or a delay and therefore does not deal with the question of a moratorium. The subject-matter of the point under discussion does not save the statute from the fault laid against it. *604
We conclude that the 1933 amendment is unconstitutional in so far as it purports to restrict or limit the pre-existing right of recovery on the bond. The judgment will be affirmed.
For affirmance — THE CHANCELLOR, CHIEF JUSTICE, TRENCHARD, CASE, BODINE, DONGES, PERSKIE, VAN BUSKIRK, KAYS, HETFIELD, DEAR, WELLS, DILL, JJ. 13.
For reversal — None.